Breh, PLEASE stop repeating platitudes and start actually trying to defend them.
Your claim that "money is not a store of value" is a ridiculous fringe claim used to justify certain platitudes of wealth-owner friendly capitalism. That
money is a store of value is obvious and generally accepted by society and economists alike.
Your claim that nothing other than the final cup of lemonade is valuable is also completely false. In a fair economy all of those components - the land, the trees, the lemons, the laborers - are seen as valuable and are competed for by people willing to pay money for them. If no one considers the laborers' work crushing lemons to be valuable, then someone else will grab that value and have the laborer do something. ALL of those things are valuable. To reduce value to "only what the end-use customer pays for" is arbitrary bs and you haven't defended that anywhere.
With everything you said about the relationship between the Fed and banks, you continue to explain WHAT is happening but you are failing to defend WHY that status quo should be supported. That pathway from the Fed to the banks to the borrower has several major failings that are currently destroying the world.
1. Rent-seekers, including the banks, bonds traders, and others in the finance industry, continue to skim enormous wealth off of that system without adding value. As I pointed out before, the largest growth in wealth and proportion of the economy in recent years has been in the finance sector. All of society pays for their greed.
2. By tying all money printing to loans at positive interest, you ensure extreme motivation for the economy to force growth, which encourages the unsustainable exploitation of all resources and extreme competition leading to lack of trust between actors. A large number of the negative effects of the current economy can be traced back directly to that foundation.
Stop repeating the mantras of your teachers like a cult member. Start considering whether those mantras are actually defensible, and explore the alternatives.